Moving On
Mike Sciacca, Independent
She packed her bags Sunday and left Huntington Beach, eager to move
on and begin life on her own.
Jeanette Antolin didn’t go that far, however - Westwood is a mere 45
miles up the 405 freeway, but far enough to get out the national
spotlight.
For now, anyway.
Antolin, who graduated from Marina High in June, has graduated to
another level in her stellar gymnastics career, now that her attempt to
land a spot on the U.S. Olympic women’s gymnastics team is over.
Just one month ago at the 2000 U.S. Olympic Team Trials in Boston,
Antolin, hampered by a recurring ankle injury, placed 11th overall at the
weekend competition. Only the top six performers make the US team, along
with two alternates.
Though disappointed at not making the team, Antolin, ever the positive
competitor and always a fighter, shifted her thoughts to her new team,
UCLA, where she is a member of the Bruins’ women’s gymnastics team.
“I can’t really say exactly why, but ever since I was a little girl,
I’ve always wanted to go to UCLA,” Antolin said. “They have a really good
gymnastics program, and I wanted to be a part of it.”
Heavily recruited by several Division I schools, including Utah and
Michigan, Antolin said the choice to remain in California was never a
tough one.
“I never wanted to leave home,” she said. “I love California.”
Fall classes begin on the UCLA campus on Monday. Although she’s in a
new setting, Antolin, who doesn’t have a major as of yet, won’t be out of
the spotlight anytime soon. Not with her talent, nor due to the fact that
three members of the 2000 US Olympic women’s gymnastics team competing in
Sydney, Australia this week - Jamie Dantzscher, Kristen Maloney, and
Alyssa Beckerman (alternate) - are friends, as well as Bruin teammates,
of Antolin’s.
Antolin, Dantzscher, and Maloney also were teammates on the 1997 US
World team.
“We’ve been friends for a long time, and I’m really happy for all of
them,” the 18-year-old said. “We’ve really become close over the years,
sort of like becoming distance sisters. I’m glad that we’ll all be at
UCLA together. We all hope we can help keep the program at the level of
success it has enjoyed nationally throughout the years.”
After trotting the globe for international competitions much of her
adolescent life, Antolin, a member of SCATS Gymnastics of Huntington
Beach, now will compete on a national scale. She says that she’s ready
for the change.
“When I look back on these past few years, I see that gymnastics has
allowed me the opportunity to travel and see the world,” she concluded.
“Going to the Olympic Trials was an awesome experience, one I’ll never
forget. But I’m ready, really ready, to move on. Going off to college
will seem like a whole different world to me.”
One full of a whole lot of new experiences, too, but Jeanette Antolin
has never backed off from a challenge.
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